Doctors Want You to Know How Much Damage Rifle Bullets Really Do
As the battle over gun ownership rages on in the US, doctors are highlighting the horrific damage semi-automatic rifles can inflict.
While the bread and butter of Gizmodo UK is in the bits and bytes of technology, we have a lot of fun in the off-topic areas, with many of the stories being filed in the WTF category. Bookmark this page for the sillier stories, from ridiculous examples of body-art, to... sausages made of skittles?
As the battle over gun ownership rages on in the US, doctors are highlighting the horrific damage semi-automatic rifles can inflict.
Recent studies have redeemed the technology by showing how CRISPR can more precisely target disease.
Enterovirus D68 has afflicted numerous children in the US and Britain since 2014, and now doctors are one step closer to finding an effective treatment.
Researchers are now speculating that the strange sounds could have been caused by improperly placed spy gear.
There may be some new, unexplained physics afoot concerning the expansion of the universe.
You’ve been here before. You’ve read this article already.
The fight over Facebook’s use of biometric data is not going away anytime soon.
The algorithm, developed by Google Brain, can tweak photos to really mess with your eyes/head.
Collared peccaries enjoy eating the cassava crops that farmers depend on to survive.
It seems weird to lump the two together, but it’s a move that scientists have been considering for nearly a century.
In fact, researchers now argue that there could be at least five broad ways diabetes manifests.
What the scientists created is called the Shankar skyrmion, a three-dimensional, tangled, closed, synthetic magnetic field formed in a Bose-Einstein condensate.
A census of Adélie penguins along the Danger Islands—a chain of remote, rocky islands off the Antarctic peninsula—has yielded a seabird hotspot that’s home to some 1.5 million penguins.
Come for the beautiful beaches, stay for the E. coli.
“Methods like these could be revolutionary for the understanding of molecular dynamics.”
The Union College archivists are now preserving the lock of hair and plan to put it on public display.